ID | 141090 |
Title Proper | Intellectuals and the one-party state in nationalist China |
Other Title Information | the case of the central politics school (1927–1947) |
Language | ENG |
Author | WANG, CHEN-CHENG |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This paper aims to provide a new perspective on the relationship between Nationalist Party (GMD) cadres and Chinese intellectuals. By studying the Central Politics School, a major GMD political training institute for professional party cadres, I hope to reassess the nature of the GMD one-party state and remind researchers of the difficult choices it faced between backing party-liners needed for the political struggle and accommodating depoliticized intellectuals needed for public administration. This paper will argue that GMD political impotence in competition with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) was due less to an inadequate recruitment of capable experts than to the over-specialization of its well-trained cadres on technical tasks. In fact, the cadres from the Central Politics School generally resembled those considered to be ‘intellectuals’ at educational level and in ideology. This compels us to reconsider how to define ‘intellectuals’ and whether they were as uniformly alienated from the one-party state as most of the scholarly literature suggests. |
`In' analytical Note | Modern Asian Studies Vol. 48, No.6; Nov 2014: p.1769-1807 |
Journal Source | Modern Asian Studies 2014-12 48, 6 |
Key Words | Nationalist China ; One - Party State ; Central Politics School ; 1927–1947 ; GMD Political Training Institute |